Home Blog Page 748

Jimi Hendrix’s ‘lost weekend’ to be turned into feature film

0

A film of Jimi Hendrix's infamous 'lost weekend' is set to go into production. Called 'Slide', the film is about events in September 1969, when he was apparently the subject of a hoax kidnapping, orchestrated by his manager. "While we have to be speculative because no definitive version of the event exists, this takes it out of the realm of fiction for me," writer and director RH Greene told Twentyfourbit.com. "It's part of Jimi's story, and I think it offers an opportunity to show him fully but from a unique angle. That was my aim in writing it, and that's going to be my aim in making it." The casting process for the film is currently underway, with production scheduled to start early next year. Meanwhile, live recordings from Hendrix's 1967 and 1968 shows in Paris and Ottawa are being released on January 25. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

A film of Jimi Hendrix‘s infamous ‘lost weekend’ is set to go into production.

Called ‘Slide’, the film is about events in September 1969, when he was apparently the subject of a hoax kidnapping, orchestrated by his manager.

“While we have to be speculative because no definitive version of the event exists, this takes it out of the realm of fiction for me,” writer and director RH Greene told Twentyfourbit.com.

“It’s part of Jimi‘s story, and I think it offers an opportunity to show him fully but from a unique angle. That was my aim in writing it, and that’s going to be my aim in making it.”

The casting process for the film is currently underway, with production scheduled to start early next year.

Meanwhile, live recordings from Hendrix’s 1967 and 1968 shows in Paris and Ottawa are being released on January 25.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Ennio Morricone announces London gig with 100-piece orchestra and choir

0
Ennio Morricone is set to perform a number of his acclaimed film soundtracks at a one-off London show next April. The composer and conductor has worked on the scores for such classics as A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, and is expected to perform a 'b...

Ennio Morricone is set to perform a number of his acclaimed film soundtracks at a one-off London show next April.

The composer and conductor has worked on the scores for such classics as A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, and is expected to perform a ‘best of’ set during the show at London‘s Royal Albert Hall on April 10.

He’ll be joined by a 100-piece orchestra and the 100-strong Crouch End Festival Chorus for the performance, which is taking place as part of ATP‘s Don’t Look Back series of gigs.

Tickets for Ennio Morricone are on sale now.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Flaming Lips’ cover of Pink Floyd’s ‘Dark Side of The Moon’ released digitally

0
The Flaming Lips have released their cover of Pink Floyd's 1973 album 'Dark Side Of The Moon' as a digital download. The album is available to download from iTunes from today (December 22), and features guest appearances from Henry Rollins and Peaches. It goes on general digital release on December...

The Flaming Lips have released their cover of Pink Floyd‘s 1973 album ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ as a digital download.

The album is available to download from iTunes from today (December 22), and features guest appearances from Henry Rollins and Peaches. It goes on general digital release on December 29.

The tracklisting, including guests, of The Flaming Lips‘ cover version of ‘Dark Side Of The Moon’ is:

‘Speak To Me’/’Breathe’ (featuring Henry Rollins and Peaches)

‘On The Run’ (featuring Henry Rollins)

‘Time’/’Breathe Reprise’

‘The Great Gig In The Sky’ (featuring Peaches and Henry Rollins)

‘Money’ (featuring Henry Rollins)

‘Us And Them’ (featuring Henry Rollins)

‘Any Colour You Like’

‘Brain Damage’ (featuring Henry Rollins)

‘Eclipse’ (featuring Henry Rollins)

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Ray Davies’ musical ‘Come Dancing’ cancelled

0
Ray Davies' forthcoming tour of his musical 'Come Dancing' has been cancelled, it has been confirmed. The show, which had its first run in 2008 and closed this year, was set to be revived by director Bill Kenwright in 2010. However, those plans have now been abandoned. "Ray [Davies] is extremely d...

Ray Davies‘ forthcoming tour of his musical ‘Come Dancing’ has been cancelled, it has been confirmed.

The show, which had its first run in 2008 and closed this year, was set to be revived by director Bill Kenwright in 2010. However, those plans have now been abandoned.

Ray [Davies] is extremely disappointed that the 2010 ‘Come Dancing’ tour will not be happening,” a spokesperson for Davies‘ studio Konk explained. “[He] will be issuing a statement in due course.”

No explanation has been given for the cancellation at present, but theatres are offering refunds to those who bought tickets.

Earlier this month, the singer hinted that he is set to reunite with his guitarist brother and Kinks bandmate Dave Davies.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Rage Against The Machine beat X Factor finalist Joe McElderry to Number One

0
Rage Against The Machine have beaten The X Factor finalist Joe McElderry to the Number One position in the UK singles chart. The US band's 1992 track 'Killing In The Name' sold more than 500,000 copies – beating McElderry's release 'The Climb' by over 50,000. Popularity for the track swelled tha...

Rage Against The Machine have beaten The X Factor finalist Joe McElderry to the Number One position in the UK singles chart.

The US band’s 1992 track ‘Killing In The Name’ sold more than 500,000 copies – beating McElderry‘s release ‘The Climb’ by over 50,000.

Popularity for the track swelled thanks to an internet campaign rallying against Simon Cowell and manufactured pop. A Facebook group, which 980,000 people joined, asked participants to buy ‘Killing In The Name’ throughout last week so it could beat ‘The Climb’ to the top of the charts.

Responding to the popularity of the campaign, Rage Against The Machine promised to play a free UK gig if the track did go to Number One – a pledge they have now maintained to honour.

Guitarist Tom Morello said: “As promised we will play a free concert in the UK in celebration of this incredible upset victory over the heavily favoured X Factor single.”

X Factor judge Simon Cowell, meanwhile, has admitted he is “gutted” that McElderry has been beaten to this year’s Christmas Number One by Rage Against The Machine, though he told the Daily Mirror he was “genuinely impressed by the campaign”.

The Facebook campaign also raised almost £100,000 for the Shelter charity.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Radiohead to record new album in January

0
Radiohead guitarist Ed O'Brien has revealed that the band are set to head into the studio to record the follow up to 'In Rainbows' in January. According to a blog on Radiohead's Dead Air Space site, O'Brien said the Oxford band are looking forward to reconvening, though he stopped short of going in...

Radiohead guitarist Ed O’Brien has revealed that the band are set to head into the studio to record the follow up to ‘In Rainbows’ in January.

According to a blog on Radiohead‘s Dead Air Space site, O’Brien said the Oxford band are looking forward to reconvening, though he stopped short of going into too much detail about the new material.

“The vibe in the camp is fantastic at present, and we head off into the studio in January to continue on from the work we started last summer,” O’Brien wrote.

“I am so genuinely excited about what we’re doing, but for obvious reasons I can’t divulge anything more,” he went on. “Anyway we all love surprises don’t we? Ten years ago we were all collectively (that’s the band) in the land of ‘Kid A’ and although hugely proud of that record, it wasn’t a fun place to be. What’s reassuring now, is that we are most definitely a different band, which should therefore mean that the music is different too and that is the aim of the game. Keep it moving.”

O’Brien also gave his views on the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, which was attended by bandmate Thom Yorke.

“I haven’t spoken to Thom yet, but judging by his entries here and reading today’s papers the outcome of Copenhagen is a bloody disgrace,” he wrote.

Elsewhere, O’Brien also picked his top ten movies to watch at Christmas.

1. Harold And Maude

2. Sideways

3. 2001: A Space Odyssey

4. Where Eagles Dare

5. Son Of Rambow

6. This is England

7. Being There

8. The Year of Living Dangerously

9. Finding Nemo

10. Moonraker

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Morrissey publishes extract from forthcoming autobiography

0
Morrissey has published an essay set to be taken from his forthcoming autobiography. A short story by the singer, entitled 'The Bleak Moor Lies', appears in 'The Dark Monarch: Magic & Modernity in British Art', published by Tate St Ives. The fictional story sees Morrissey write about taking a ...

Morrissey has published an essay set to be taken from his forthcoming autobiography.

A short story by the singer, entitled ‘The Bleak Moor Lies’, appears in ‘The Dark Monarch: Magic & Modernity in British Art’, published by Tate St Ives.

The fictional story sees Morrissey write about taking a trip to Saddleworth Moor in the South Pennines and encountering a ghost.

Famously, Morrissey referenced Saddleworth Moor in The Smiths‘Suffer Little Children’ . The moors became notorious when serial killers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley used them as a burial ground.

In the essay, Morrissey asks: “How many unfortunates have Saddleworth Moor as their resting place?”

Edited by Michael Bracewell, Martin Clark and Alun Rowlands, the book also includes contributions from Jon Savage and Damien Hirst.

Though Morrissey‘s autobiography does not have a release date, the singer has previously said it will span his entire music career.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Wild Mercury Sound’s 2009 Top 100

0

A few bits and pieces to mop up today, beginning with one last thankyou to everyone who has posted on the end of year blogs – or, come to that, who's commented on any of the things I’ve written in the past 12 months. It’s been a genuine pleasure to hear from almost all of you; and of course heartening to discover other people interested in the same music. To save any latecomers clicking through all the pages I rather cynically spread the 2009 Top 100 over, I’ve collated them all here. Apologies, too, to Babe, Terror, who I really should have squeezed in there. And a mention for two records from other years, Brightblack Morning Light’s “Motion To Rejoin” and Terry Riley’s “Persian Surgery Dervishes”, which provided significant inspiration and consolation in 2009. Anyhow, let me direct you to www.myspace.com/moonduo , where you’ll be able to find a token Christmas tune (there’s a widget under band members) from Moon Duo, the pretty cool Wooden Shjips side project. And to quote Sun Araw’s Cameron Stallones (thanks, Cameron), “MIND PSALM GET ON IT”… 100. Sunn 0))): “Monoliths And Dimensions” 99. The Dead Weather: “Horehound” 98. Adam Payne: "Organ" 97. Shrinebuilder: “Shrinebuilder” 96. OOIOO: “Armonico Hewa” 95. Black Sheep: "Kiss My Sweet Apocalypse" 94. Madness: “The Liberty Of Norton Folgate” 93. Condo Fucks: "Fuckbook" 92. Peaches: "I Feel Cream" 91. White Rainbow: “New Clouds” 90. Nick Jonah Davis: “Guitar Recordings Vol 1” 89. Blues Control: “Local Flavor” 88. Jarvis Cocker: "Further Complications" 87. Flower-Corsano Duo: "The Four Aims" 86. Tim Hecker: “An Imaginary Country” 85. Bob Dylan: “Together Through Life” 84. The Rakes: "Klang!" 83. PJ Harvey & John Parish: "A Woman A Man Walked By" 82. Eagles Of Death Metal: “Heart On” 81. Neko Case: Middle Cyclone 80. MV & EE: “Barn Nova” 79. Bruce Springsteen: "Working On A Dream" 78. Lightning Bolt: “Earthly Delights” 77. Flaming Lips: “Embryonic” 76. Mamer: “Eagle” 75. Alela Diane: "To Be Still" 74. Neil Young: "Fork In The Road" 73. Pocahaunted: "Passage" 72. Wavves: "Wavvves" 71. James Yorkston & The Big Eyes Family Players: "Folk Songs" 70. Cornershop: "Judy Sucks A Lemon For Breakfast" 69. Andrew WK: "55 Cadillac" 68. Peter Walker: "Spanish Guitar" 67. Dirty Projectors: "Bitte Orca" 66 Ben Reynolds: "How Day Earnt Its Night" 65. Alasdair Roberts: "Spoils" 64. DOOM: "BORN LIKE THIS" 63. The Lemonheads: "Varshons" 62. Sir Richard Bishop: “The Freak Of Araby” 61. Mark Kozelek: "Lost Verses - Live 60. Os Mutantes: "Haih" 59. Matias Aguayo: “Ay Ay Ay” 58. Richard Swift: "The Atlantic Ocean" 57. Liam Hayes & Plush: "Bright Penny" 56. Om: "God Is Good" 55. Sonic Youth: "The Eternal" 54. Dinosaur Jr: "Farm" 53. Assemble Head In Sunburst Sound: “When Sweet Sleep Returned” 52. Ducktails: "Ducktails" 51. The Fiery Furnaces: "I'm Going Away" 50. Magik Markers: "Balf Quarry" 49. Jack Rose And The Black Twig Pickers: “Jack Rose And The Black Twig Pickers” 48. Obits: "I Blame You" 47. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy: "Beware" 46. Volcano Choir: "Unmap" 45. Beak>: "Beak>" 44. On Fillmore: "Extended Vacation" 43. Hush Arbors: "Yankee Reality" 42. Arctic Monkeys: "Humbug" 41. Yo La Tengo: "Popular Songs" 40. The xx: "xx" 39. Espers: "III" 38. The Unthanks: “Here’s The Tender Coming” 37. Leonard Cohen: "Live In London" 36. Them Crooked Vultures: "Them Crooked Vultures" 35. Sufjan Stevens: "The BQE" 34. Califone: "All My Friends Are Funeral Singers" 33. The Field: "Yesterday And Today" 32. Sleepy Sun: "Embrace" 31. Tim Buckley: "Live At The Folklore Center, NYC – March 6, 1967" 30. Broadcast And The Focus Group: “Broadcast And The Focus Group Investigate Witch Cults Of The Radio Age” 29. Glass Rock: “Tall Firs Meet Soft Location” 28. Ganglians: "Monster Head Room" 27. Kurt Vile: "Childish Prodigy" 26. Super Furry Animals: "Dark Days/ Light Years" 25. The Necks: "Silverwater" 24. Real Estate: "Real Estate" 23. Trembling Bells: "Carbeth" 22. Raphael Saadiq: "The Way I See It" 21. Reigning Sound: "Love And Curses" 20. Etienne Jaumet: "Night Music" 19. Fever Ray: "Fever Ray" 18. Fuck Buttons: "Tarot Sport" 17. Wooden Shjips: "Dos" 16. Tinariwen: “Imidiwan: Companions” 15. Wilco: "Wilco (The Album)" 14. James Blackshaw: "The Glass Bead Game" 13. Mountains: "Choral" 12. Death: ". . . For The Whole World To See" 11. Arbouretum: "Song Of The Pearl" 10. Boredoms: "Super Roots 10" 9. White Denim: "Fits" 8. Bill Callahan: "Sometimes I Wish We Were An Eagle" 7. Mountains: "Etching" 6. Sun Araw: "Heavy Deeds" 5. Wild Beasts: "Two Dancers" 4. Jim O'Rourke: "The Visitor" 3. Animal Collective: "Merriweather Post Pavilion" 2. Lindstrøm & Prins Thomas; "II" 1. Grizzly Bear: "Veckatimest"

A few bits and pieces to mop up today, beginning with one last thankyou to everyone who has posted on the end of year blogs – or, come to that, who’s commented on any of the things I’ve written in the past 12 months. It’s been a genuine pleasure to hear from almost all of you; and of course heartening to discover other people interested in the same music.

Arcade Fire On Top Of Battle For Album Of Decade

0

The Arcade Fire's "Funeral" is currently the choice of Uncut's online readers as Album Of The Noughties. However, you can still make a difference to the vote. Simply visit our special What Is The Album Of The Decade? You Decide! feature and cast your votes out of ten for each of our selected albums as they appear. There are 150 albums to mark out of ten: the same 150, of course, that figured in Uncut's recent office rundown of the best of the Noughties. That chart was topped by The White Stripes' "White Blood Cells" - currently eighth in your poll. To see our full Top 150, click here. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The Arcade Fire’s “Funeral” is currently the choice of Uncut’s online readers as Album Of The Noughties. However, you can still make a difference to the vote.

Simply visit our special What Is The Album Of The Decade? You Decide! feature and cast your votes out of ten for each of our selected albums as they appear.

There are 150 albums to mark out of ten: the same 150, of course, that figured in Uncut’s recent office rundown of the best of the Noughties. That chart was topped by The White Stripes’ “White Blood Cells” – currently eighth in your poll.

To see our full Top 150, click here.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Radiohead’s Thom Yorke gatecrashes UN Climate Conference – video

0
Radiohead's Thom Yorke posed as a member of the press to gain access to the United Nations Climate Conference in Copenhagen yesterday (December 17). Yorke explained to a camera crew how he gained entry to the conference, which is not open to the public. Watch video footage of Yorke talking about h...

Radiohead‘s Thom Yorke posed as a member of the press to gain access to the United Nations Climate Conference in Copenhagen yesterday (December 17).

Yorke explained to a camera crew how he gained entry to the conference, which is not open to the public.

Watch video footage of Yorke talking about how he snuck in by scrolling down now.

“I’m here as a press person,” he explained, adding: “Do you imagine they’d let me in otherwise?! See how long it lasts before I get kicked out.”

Yorke also voiced his concern about the outcomes of the conference, which are expected to be announced today (December 18).

“I hope that they can at least get the basics sorted out,” he said. “It’s a lot of uptight, middle-aged men doing the negotiations that need to see through their particular little spheres of self-interest and look at the bigger picture.”

Watch footage of Yorke:

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Unreleased John Lennon interview published

0

A never-before-published interview with John Lennon dating back to 1968 has been published for the first time. Lennon spoke to Keele University student Maurice Hindle for over six hours in 1968 at his mansion in Weybridge, Surry, after Hindle had written to him via the Beatles Monthly fanzine. Although a small part of the interview was published in the Keele University magazine UNIT, much of it has lain dormant until appearing in the latest issue of the New Statesman. Hindle explained that he was met by Lennon himself at the Beatle's local train station. "Outside Weybridge station, a Mini Cooper with smoked-glass windows skidded to a halt, like something out of 'The Italian Job'," he explained. "In the driver's seat was Lennon. We students crammed into the back of the Mini and John drove us up the bumpy private road that led to his house, Kenwood." The interview sees Lennon address criticism levelled at him and The Beatles by political commentator Tariq Ali in his Black Dwarf publication. "He says 'Revolution' was no more revolutionary than 'Mrs Dale's Diary'," Lennon said to Hindle of Ali. "So it mightn't have been. But the point is to change your head - it's no good knocking down a few old bloody Tories! "What does he think he's gonna change? The system's what he says it is: a load of crap. But just smashing it up isn't gonna do it." See Newstatesman.com for more from the interview. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

A never-before-published interview with John Lennon dating back to 1968 has been published for the first time.

Lennon spoke to Keele University student Maurice Hindle for over six hours in 1968 at his mansion in Weybridge, Surry, after Hindle had written to him via the Beatles Monthly fanzine. Although a small part of the interview was published in the Keele University magazine UNIT, much of it has lain dormant until appearing in the latest issue of the New Statesman.

Hindle explained that he was met by Lennon himself at the Beatle‘s local train station.

“Outside Weybridge station, a Mini Cooper with smoked-glass windows skidded to a halt, like something out of ‘The Italian Job‘,” he explained. “In the driver’s seat was Lennon. We students crammed into the back of the Mini and John drove us up the bumpy private road that led to his house, Kenwood.”

The interview sees Lennon address criticism levelled at him and The Beatles by political commentator Tariq Ali in his Black Dwarf publication.

“He says ‘Revolution’ was no more revolutionary than ‘Mrs Dale’s Diary‘,” Lennon said to Hindle of Ali. “So it mightn’t have been. But the point is to change your head – it’s no good knocking down a few old bloody Tories!

“What does he think he’s gonna change? The system’s what he says it is: a load of crap. But just smashing it up isn’t gonna do it.”

See Newstatesman.com for more from the interview.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The Blockheads to be joined onstage by ‘Ian Dury’ actor Andy Serkis

0
Ian Dury's old band The Blockheads are set to hook up onstage with actor Andy Serkis in London tonight (December 17). Serkis, who plays Dury in the forthcoming biopic of his life, 'Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll', is understood to have been invited by the band to sing 'Reasons To Be Cheerful...

Ian Dury‘s old band The Blockheads are set to hook up onstage with actor Andy Serkis in London tonight (December 17).

Serkis, who plays Dury in the forthcoming biopic of his life, ‘Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll’, is understood to have been invited by the band to sing ‘Reasons To Be Cheerful Part Three’ at their London Electric Ballroom gig.

‘Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll’, directed by Mat Whitecross, is released on January 9. Ray Winstone, Mackenzie Crook and Naomie Harris also feature in the film.

Tickets for The Blockheads are on sale now.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

The 46th Uncut Playlist Of 2009

0

Quickly this morning, a bunch of new things we’ve been playing, as the February and March promos start arriving. A lot of comps, it seems, and a couple I don’t like at all. Auspicious arrivals, I guess, include Gil Scott-Heron singing Smog, a new Will Oldham live album, and the Holly Miranda debut, where she’s backed up by David Sitek and some other bits of TV On The Radio. And thanks, again, for all your comments on the Top 100: It starts here if you haven't had a look yet. 1 Gil Scott-Heron – I’m New Here (XL) 2 Carlton Melton – Pass It On… (Mid-To-Late) 3 Various Artists – Warp 2010 (Warp) 4 Cluster – Qua (Klangbad/Broken Silence) 5 Ian King – Panic Grass & Fever Few (Fledg’ling) 6 Various Artists – Bob Blank: The Blank Generation – Blank Tapes NYC 1975-1985 (Strut) 7 Various Artists – Yeti 8 (Yeti) 8 Various Artists – Pop Ambient 2010 (Kompakt) 9 Bonny Billy & The Picket Line – Funtown Comedown (Sea Note) 10 Yeasayer – Odd Blood (Mute) 11 Various Artists – Freedom Rhythm & Sound: Revolutionary Jazz & The Civil Rights Movement 1963-82 (Soul Jazz) 12 Massive Attack – Heligoland (Virgin) 13 Various Artists – Nigeria Afrobeat Special: The New Explosive Sound In 1970s Nigeria (Soundway) 14 Archie Bronson Outfit – Coconut (Domino) 15 Quasi – American Gong (Domino) 16 Holly Miranda – The Magician’s Private Library (XL) 17 Various Artists – Nigeria Special Volume Two: Modern Highlife, Afro Sounds & Nigerian Blues 1970-6 (Soundway)

Quickly this morning, a bunch of new things we’ve been playing, as the February and March promos start arriving. A lot of comps, it seems, and a couple I don’t like at all.

The Cardinals’ bassist Chris ‘Spacewolf’ Feinstein dies aged 42

0
The Cardinals' bassist Chris 'Spacewolf' Feinstein has died aged 42. Although details on Feinstein's death are scant at present, he is reported to have been found in his Manhattan apartment on Monday (December 14) morning. Ryan Adams' label Lost Highway Records issued a statement on Feinstein's de...

The Cardinals‘ bassist Chris ‘Spacewolf’ Feinstein has died aged 42.

Although details on Feinstein‘s death are scant at present, he is reported to have been found in his Manhattan apartment on Monday (December 14) morning.

Ryan Adams‘ label Lost Highway Records issued a statement on Feinstein‘s death and paying tribute to him.

“It is with great sadness to report that Cardinals bassist/vocalist/collaborator Chris Feinstein (Spacewolf) has recently passed away. He was an integral member of Ryan Adams & The Cardinals and will be deeply missed by all of us here at Lost Highway and throughout the entire music community. Please send your thoughts and prayers to Chris‘s family, friends and bandmates during this difficult time.”

The Cardinals‘ drummer Brad Pemberton also paid his respects to Feinstein, saying: “This is the saddest day of my life. I lost my best friend today…things will never be quite the same.”

Ryan Adams, who announced his hiatus from music in early 2009, is yet to comment on Feinstein‘s passing.

Feinstein has also worked with Albert Hammond Jnr and Santigold.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

U2 versus Paul McCartney at next year’s Golden Globes ceremony

0
Sir Paul McCartney and U2 have both been shortlisted for Best Original Song at the Golden Globe film awards, which are set to take place in Hollywood on January 17, 2010. McCartney has previously revealed that his new studio track 'I Want To Come Home' penned for the Robert De Niro-starring drama E...

Sir Paul McCartney and U2 have both been shortlisted for Best Original Song at the Golden Globe film awards, which are set to take place in Hollywood on January 17, 2010.

McCartney has previously revealed that his new studio track ‘I Want To Come Home’ penned for the Robert De Niro-starring drama Everybody’s Fine, was written in just one evening. The song goes up against U2‘s ‘Winter’, from the Jim Sheridan (In The Name of The Father, My Left Foot) directed thriller Brothers.

Also unveiled in the shortlist for the 2010 ceremony is Yeah Yeah Yeah‘s frontwoman Karen O – in the Best Score category, for her collaboration on the soundtrack to Spike Jonze‘s adaptation of Where The Wild Things Are.

The Golden Globes 2010 music category shortlists are as follows: full list at Goldenglobes.org

Best Original Score:

Michael Giacchino – Up

Marvin Hamlisch – The Informant

James Horner – Avatar

Abel Korzeniowski – A Single Man

Karen O, Carter Burwell – Where The Wild Things Are

Best Original Song:

‘Cinema Italiano’, Nine (Maury Yeston)

‘I Want To Come Home’, Everybody’s Fine (Paul McCartney)

‘I See You’, Avatar (James Horner, Simon Franglen, Kuk Harrell)

‘The Weary Kind (Theme From Crazy Heart)’, Crazy Heart (Ryan Bingham,

T Bone Burnett)

‘Winter’, Brothers (U2)

Pic credit: PA Photos

Rare and unseen Elvis Presley photographs go on show in London

0

A collection of rare and unseen photos of Elvis Presley has opened at London's Proud Galleries Chelsea. The 'Elvis At 21' exhibition features images taken by Alfred Wertheimer of the singer on the cusp of stardom. Wertheimer amassed the collection as he followed Presley on his 1956 tour of North America, shortly after he signed to the RCA record label from the legendary Sun Records. The exhibition is open now and runs until January 31. See WyndamGrandLondon.co.uk for more information. Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

A collection of rare and unseen photos of Elvis Presley has opened at London‘s Proud Galleries Chelsea.

The ‘Elvis At 21’ exhibition features images taken by Alfred Wertheimer of the singer on the cusp of stardom. Wertheimer amassed the collection as he followed Presley on his 1956 tour of North America, shortly after he signed to the RCA record label from the legendary Sun Records.

The exhibition is open now and runs until January 31. See WyndamGrandLondon.co.uk for more information.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Kurt Vile and Wolf People: Club Uncut, London The Lexington, December 15, 2009

0

Some surprise, really, that Wolf People, a new London band just signed to Jagjaguwar, have decided to stick with their name, given the seemingly innumerable number of Wolf-related bands currently around. Will (sorry, in advance) Wolf People rise above the pack? It’s hard to say, as they open the latest Club Uncut. Essentially, they’re a young and fantastically proficient psych blues/folk kind of band, with a lot of pricey looking vintage kit. While they might naturally be aligned with the likes of Howlin Rain and so on, they’d probably fit more comfortably on a genuinely antique bill with Humble Pie or, in their less appealing moments, Ocean Colour Scene. On record, a flute occasionally dominates and steers Wolf People’s sound towards Jethro Tull, too. But tonight, the flautist is absent, and the focus is on Jack Sharp’s lead guitar. He’s a very fine player, undoubtedly, and the rest of his band (especially the drummer) are good, too: the quartet sound like they’ve spent epic rehearsals getting their performances just-so. Weirdly, though, it’s Wolf People’s skilfulness that currently undermines what they do, I think. They’re playing a kind of music that often benefits from a little friction, spontaneity and wildness, sometimes – in Howlin Rain’s case, again – from not-too suppressed past derangement in noise and hardcore bands. But whenever Wolf People let rip, it comes across as rather over-considered, even prissy. Let’s hope experience and confidence will free them up to jam in a more expressive and untethered way. Could be interesting… Kurt Vile, meanwhile, is in a pretty interesting place already. I wrote about him at length in a piece about “Childish Prodigy”, but a few of those references don’t hold as much water when you see him play live. At times, he comes across a bit like Dylan, but in a strange, looping, faintly psychedelic garage way that isn’t exactly a typical way of filtering Dylan’s influence. Perhaps the Spacemen 3 t-shirts worn by Vile and his drummer are a clue. Vile has a knack for making reverberant and loosely structured songs that are memorable in a slippery, non-obvious way. As on his last record, the show’s split between stunned garage chuggers like, most obviously, “Freak Train”, where the current Violators lineup (minus Adam Granduciel, reportedly working on the next War On Drugs record) track Vile’s fraught ambulations with live drums, recorded beats and droning sax. Sometimes there are a couple of guitars, sometimes a harmonica. Always a sense of curious, restless momentum, which even feeds into Vile’s solo pieces (like “Heart Attack”, say), where his deft folk fingerpicking comes to the fore. As the long show goes on, these solo tunes (which Allan compared to Dino Valente, neatly) start to dominate, and it feels a little as if Vile, true to his lo-fi roots, might be sprawling out towards something self-indulgent and under-edited. Amazingly, though, he remains utterly compelling, and the off-the-cuff feel only adds to the general charm. I guess his performance shows how a vague air of ramshackle haphazardness need not detract from either songwriting or musicianship, but can actually enliven both of them: a lesson that could be usefully learned by Wolf People – if it’s something that could be actually learned, of course. I’m not sure.

Some surprise, really, that Wolf People, a new London band just signed to Jagjaguwar, have decided to stick with their name, given the seemingly innumerable number of Wolf-related bands currently around.

Danger Mouse and The Shins’ James Mercer announce Broken Bells album details

0
Danger Mouse and The Shins frontman James Mercer have announced the release date of their first album together. The album, called 'Broken Bells', is out on March 8 and features 10 tracks including 'The Ghost Inside', 'Vaporize' and 'Your Head Is On Fire'. The album's first single, 'The High Road',...

Danger Mouse and The Shins frontman James Mercer have announced the release date of their first album together.

The album, called ‘Broken Bells’, is out on March 8 and features 10 tracks including ‘The Ghost Inside’, ‘Vaporize’ and ‘Your Head Is On Fire’.

The album’s first single, ‘The High Road’, is also set to premiere on the band’s website Brokenbells.com next Monday (December 21).

Mercer and Danger Mouse – real name Brian Burton – play all instruments on the record, although composer Daniele Luppi worked with them on string arrangements.

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.

Morrissey faced with ‘zero interest’ from record labels

0
Morrissey has revealed that there is currently "zero interest" in him from record labels. The singer, who parted company with Universal in November, spoke of his current situation in an end of year statement on his True-to-you.net website. "What does the future hold? What does the next minute hold...

Morrissey has revealed that there is currently “zero interest” in him from record labels.

The singer, who parted company with Universal in November, spoke of his current situation in an end of year statement on his True-to-you.net website.

“What does the future hold? What does the next minute hold? It all rests as ever on determination – that which springs from somewhere deeper than the body,” he wrote. “Record label interest is zero, but the sun will creep back into the room one way or another. It always does.”

Morrissey also used the statement to talk about his recently released b-sides album ‘Swords’, which only charted at Number 55 in the UK.

“I am sorry that ‘Swords’ was such a meek disaster,” the singer wrote. “It was proposed and accepted as a budget-priced CD, yet emerged everywhere as the most expensive CD in the racks. It was poorly distributed and didn’t stand a chance, and ranks as the lowest chart position I’ve ever encountered.”

Referencing his troubled 2009 tour, which has seen him cancel a gig in Liverpool after being hit with a drink, and collapse during a Swindon show, Morrissey said:

“Hope denied in Liverpool, and the physical limits were tipped in Swindon – these were life’s unfortunate lows. I spent the night at the Great Western Hospital in Swindon where the staff restored my faith in humanity. I had no idea such kindness existed.”

Latest music and film news on Uncut.co.uk.